We Are Shocked, Shocked That Walmart May Have Been Bribing People In Mexico

Hold the darn phone — Walmart has been indicated in a bribery scandal in which the company’s Mexican arm was bribing people to the tune of $24 million to obtain permits, and then attempted to cover up the whole scandal? We shan’t believe it. Ha! Just kidding. That makes total sense.

Yes, we’re being a bit flippant — but that’s only because Walmart seems to have stepped into such a huge pile of you-know-what that we can barely wrap our heads around it.

The New York Times has published a detailed, exhaustive account of allegations against Walmart that claim the company not only used bribes to squash competition and expand in Mexco, but that even when executives at the top of the company were made aware of the reported wrongdoings, those in charge ordered the whole thing hushed up.

It all started in September 2005 when a senior Walmart lawyer was contacted by a former executive at Walmart de Mexico who said the push to expand in the country had led the company to pay bribes in a shocking amount.

Then it gets even better.

Wal-Mart dispatched investigators to Mexico City, and within days they unearthed evidence of widespread bribery. They found a paper trail of hundreds of suspect payments totaling more than $24 million. They also found documents showing that Wal-Mart de Mexico’s top executives not only knew about the payments, but had taken steps to conceal them from Wal-Mart’s headquarters in Bentonville, Ark. In a confidential report to his superiors, Wal-Mart’s lead investigator, a former F.B.I. special agent, summed up their initial findings this way: “There is reasonable suspicion to believe that Mexican and USA laws have been violated.”

The lead investigator recommended that Wal-Mart expand the investigation.

Instead, an examination by The New York Times found, Wal-Mart’s leaders shut it down.

As soon as Walmart got wind that the NYT was checking into things, the company told the Department of Justice they were looking into possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, “a federal law that makes it a crime for American corporations and their subsidiaries to bribe foreign officials. Wal-Mart said the company had learned of possible problems with how it obtained permits, but stressed that the issues were limited to ‘discrete’ cases.”

“We do not believe that these matters will have a material adverse effect on our business,” the company said in a filing at the time with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

Really, it’s mind-boggling — and that’s just the gist, the tip of the gigantic shopping cart iceberg careening through the company, if you will. The whole report is about 7,600 words and tangled all the way through with jaw-dropping allegations.

Walmart has responded to the articlewith a post on their corporate site titled, “Walmart Statement in Response to Recent New York Times Article About Compliance with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act” that reads, in part:

We take compliance with the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) very seriously and are committed to having a strong and effective global anti-corruption program in every country in which we operate.

We will not tolerate noncompliance with FCPA anywhere or at any level of the company.

Many of the alleged activities in The New York Times article are more than six years old. If these allegations are true, it is not a reflection of who we are or what we stand for. We are deeply concerned by these allegations and are working aggressively to determine what happened.

In the fall of last year, the Company, through the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, began an extensive investigation related to compliance with the FCPA. That investigation is being conducted by outside legal counsel and forensic accountants, who are experts in FCPA compliance, and they are reporting regularly to the Audit Committee.

We have met voluntarily with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to self-disclose the ongoing investigation on this matter. We also filed a 10-Q in December to inform our shareholders of the investigation. The Company’s outside advisors have and will continue to meet with the DOJ and SEC to report on the progress of the investigation.

We are committed to getting to the bottom of this matter. The audit committee and the outside advisors have at their disposal all the resources they may need to pursue a comprehensive and thorough investigation.

Oh so, since it happened over six years ago, this should all just be old news and we can all forget about it, huh? Somehow we have a feeling this whole things isn’t going to blow over so easily.

Read the entire article by the New York Times in the source link below, and see if your brain doesn’t feel just a bit exhausted after doing so.

Is there anyone here who actually is a tiny bit surprised? I’d be shocked if I heard that Walmart was in Mexico and hadn’t done what was described in the article.

Doing big business in the U.S. is only different in that you have to be way more discreet than in Mexico. You have to entertain officials, give donations, considerations and gifts, give loans at 0.01% interest, give them rides in your jet, let them use your vacation home, etc., etc.

“Considerations” are also part of the economy. Unfortunately, since everyone thinks inducements are so bad, we don’t have records on how much of the economy depends on some sort of corruption. I think it’s a significant part of the economy. Otherwise, how do you think things would get done?

But the question is who is to blame for those lost jobs Walmart or the American consumers who have shown time and again, over the last 40 years, that they are not willing to pay a premium for goods made in the US.

What this really boils down to is.. Mexican executives of an American company while working in Mexico .. basically did what is expected in Mexico with its corrupt government. Then hid it from their American supervisors.

Says so right here in the article: “They also found documents showing that Wal-Mart de Mexico’s top executives not only knew about the payments, but had taken steps to conceal them from Wal-Mart’s headquarters in Bentonville, Ark”

Walmart knows fully well how business works in Mexico, they are not stupid. They will not question things if all is going well and the bucks are rolling forward and when the sh*t hits the rotating oscillator (fan) like it did, they will feign surprise, take it “seriously”, promise to get to the bottom of things, pay their fines, admit no guilt and business goes on.

Those living in the Minneapolis metro are learning that lesson once again. Hundreds of millions in tax money about to be “given” to a private business, all because said business black mailed the city(pay me or I move my team to LA). How is this any different?

Yes even the walmart logo is different now. Its not like the company made billions that it otherwise wouldn’t have made had it not made the bribes. Oh wait a second it did make billions because of the bribes; thus should not the fines be proportional to the gains? Otherwise the probable small fines are just a new bribe to buy a get-out-of-jail-free card for the executives. Some prosecutor gets to bag say 50 million in fines and the company keeps on like normal with some “structural changes” in place to prevent this from happening. This all as opposed to real justice where people who further corrupted a third world country going to jail and losing everything they own as a petty drug dealer would get in jail time and lost property due to some proceeds of crime seizure law.

It does’nt surprise me in the least. Wally World being the one of the biggest corporations in America, it would’nt surprise me in the least that over the years they have bribed other people to get to where they are today.

anyone who knows anything about business(and pretty much anything) in mexico knows that this is the norm.

one time family of mine was traveling in mexico, a trasnsito (traffic cop) pulled them over for goin 15km over and started hasseling them. finally the driver said, i know you want a bribe but i have no money to give you, the cop said i want 500 pesos. after some negotiating he settled for a grilled chicken some tortillas and two sodas. they cop and his partner were just hungry.

Your right. Other companies have been doing it for decades. Wasn’t the pollution from a Mexican Chrysler Plant so bad it was affecting towns in the US(Brownsville?).

The problem alot of these countries don’t even have laws like the US. They lack not only anti bribery laws they lack basic building codes and zoning laws. They lack anti pollution & worker safety laws. Those corporations who voluntarily chose to exploit these loopholes don’t care or realize that the local citizenary will spend more money fighting the effects from lack of structure & laws than they will on their product.

I’m no Walmart fan, but bribes are just part of doing business in many countries. Does anybody else remember the minor flap a couple of years ago over a Finnish guide to tourism in Russia that included instructions for bribing Russian officials?

Even in some American cities, I understand building permits and such can be delayed for quite a while unless some “extra consideration” is made.

The practice may not be right, but the recipients of the bribes bear at least half of the blame.

Extending a little on this comment…or rather condensing it a little. Bribery = Business as usual. Period. Honestly, isn’t it kind of the American way? In the least offensive manner possible. If you have money to throw around to get your way, and people are willing to accept said money to allow you to get your way, it’s going to happen. Actually, saying that’s the American way might be unfair, it’s the world’s way in general. Money = Power, at the end of the day. If you have it, you can get away with things that people who don’t have it, wouldn’t be able to.

That’s just it, those people who defend it don’t have a problem with non-government (sorry, non U.S. Government) corruption, because it’s a prominent part of capitalism. In the eyes of many people greed, corruption and malfeasance are good things, to be lauded if they produce a higher profit margin for the boards & CEO’s of the world. Dont’ forget, these same people thought that the Shareholders of Citi had no right to be angry with it’s Board and CEO’s salaries.

No, it’s not a big deal because the FCPA specifically excuses bribes paid to officials for things within a normal course of action, i.e. paying an official for a permit that the law says they have to issue anyway, even though he won’t do it without a bribe

A Walmart can wreck the countryside just as much in Mexico as in the US. Will Walmart build adequate roads with proper traffic control. Will they have a proper sewer system or will they dump on the public like some of the US auto plants have done over the decades. Will the building inspectors follow a modern code like earthquake or hurricane resistant or build a big hut that will collapse after a few drops of rain or a few shivers from a quake. Is there enough power for that area? Is the infrastructure there? Mexican shoppers and residents don’t deserve those pesky building codes & zoning laws ment to protect them?

A former coworker hated going to Mexico to inspect factories there. Once he was pulled over for a traffic violation, and the police took him right to an ATM machine. Turns out the fine he had to pay, on the spot, was whatever he could take out of his checking account.

This story doesn’t surprise me in the least. If people think this doesn’t go on all over the world, every day, with almost every company, they’re dreaming.

Why are you surprised? Mexico is a lawless nation. The ostensible federal gov’t is just there to give the place a sense of legitimacy, but in reality the place is run by gangs and drug lords. What we call a “bribe”, to them it is what we would call an “application fee”.

That’s sums it up. The false premise of being a full fledged first world country must be maintained by outside governments & corporations so they can exploit their global agenda. Should say exploit the globe period.

If you read the article, they did a really good job of throwing the money into what can only be described as “slush fund” accounts, but by god they know if someone is misusing a pack of pens in a store.

Paying off local officials for zoning permits? “Negotiating” with unions over construction projects. Gasp! I’m sure this never happens in the United States, especially ethical cities like Chicago and NYC.

Riiiigggghhhht.

This was just a practice run for Wally World’s eventual takeover of corrupt, mafia-controlled areas in th US.

“Grease money” is completely legal, if that’s what this turns out to be – money that doesn’t get you benefits others cannot get, but rather money that helps you get the things anyone else can get, but faster.